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August 30, 2007
The Killer Bs attack e-mail
One night when my son Sam was eight or nine, we were watching television when a 30-second commercial came on promoting an upcoming news special about killer bees.
“They’re heading this way!” proclaimed the announcer in an ominous voice. “Africanized honey bees have caused devastation throughout the South, and now they’re migrating northward. What horrible things will happen when the killer bees get here?”
Sam watched without comment, but after I put him to bed, he called me. He sounded so upset that I immediately went in to his room to see what was wrong.
“Mom, I can’t sleep,” he whispered. “I keep thinking about those killer bees. What horrible things will happen when they get here?”
Ever since then, killer bees make me remember Sam at this age (he’s now 20), which makes me smile. This is why I was amused when I saw yesterday’s newsletter. article, “Attack of the Killer Bs” (registration required, but it’s free).
“No, not those killer bees,” writes Loren McDonald. “These Killer Bs are a nasty swarm of words used by marketers haven’t caught on that marketing by email has evolved from its earliest days.”
Ms. McDonald refers to three Killer Bs: blast, broadcast and bulk. “They all speak to the age-old practice of marketing a uniform message to a mass audience. [People who use these words] don’t get that email marketing . . . is set apart from other channels because it comes as close to one-to-one-marketing as you can in a mass medium.”
For example, Ms. McDonald talks about the problem with “blast.” “I frequently hear otherwise intelligent marketers refer to ‘sending out an email blast,’ as if email marketing required no strategy or thinking . . . A blast has a lot of power behind it, and the messages goes far and wide, but the target is value and undefined.”
This made me think of the struggle that many of my clients are having with targeting their e-mail communication (and other forms as well). In marketing, the era of “send all” has long passed; smart marketers know that, in order to be compelling and relevant, e-mail needs to be targeted to meet customers’ specific needs.
But in internal communication, a “blast”—and its brethren, “broadcast” and “bulk”—are still standard operating procedure. Too many times, the strategy is to send nearly every message to every employee, without segmenting or targeting e-mails to meet employees’ needs.
Are the Killer Bs buzzing around in your organization? Be very afraid.
Posted by Alison Davis at 02:37 PM
August 12, 2007
Martha’s spring cleaning
Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia, the magazine and merchandising company founded by you-know-who, has just revamped its web site. It’s worth visiting for several reasons:
The design is clean, colorful and lively. Martha’s stuff has always been distinctively designed, and this is no exception.
Take Martha’s guided tour; it’s simply terrific. What a friendly, fun way to introduce visitors to the features and benefits of a web site!
The site has been redesigned not just to spruce it up, but for critical business reasons. As an April 10 MarketWatch article explains, the new web site represents a “bid to capture more online revenue.
“The new site seeks to capitalize on Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia’s well-known brands to increase online visitors and generate more advertising and other revenue from the Internet,” the article states. “The strategy is a key component of the company’s ambitious goal to lessen reliance on its magazines and generate a third of its earnings from the Internet.”
I continue to advise clients to look closely at Internet sites in order to gain inspiration (and steal ideas) for your intranet site. It’s important because Internet sites like Martha’s have so much at stake—they’re not just hoping that people will visit, their business depends on it. So they offer a free demonstration of techniques that attract visitors, and encourage them to stay, browse, interact and buy.
As Martha might say, “That’s a good thing.”
Posted by Alison Davis at 05:14 PM
